Bowe and Wilson remain the primary receivers with Avant operating as a solid third option. I do think it’s interesting Hammond got a few more snaps than Hemingway, though it likely has to do with the formations that were called. Hammond is more of an outside receiver, while Hemingway is a slot guy.

▪ Tight ends: Travis Kelce 52, Anthony Fasano 42.

It appears Kelce has usurped Fasano as the Chiefs’ top tight end, even though there’s plenty of room for both guys.

With starter Allen Bailey out, Vance Walker earned most of his reps for the second straight week. Kevin Vickerson ate into Jaye Howard’s snaps a bit. The newly-signed Williams make his first defensive appearance as a Chief.

The story here is Ford logging a season-high in snaps. The Chiefs’ dominance — and Hali’s creaky knee — allowed them to give their first-round pick an extended look for the first time all season. There was a time when Martin used to earn as many, or more, snaps than Ford did in a reserve role. Zombo also worked in as a reserve for Hali. Johnson has fully been surpassed by Mays as a starter at inside linebacker.

The Raiders’ inexplicable decision to air it out 56 times against a struggling run defense allowed the Chiefs to give safety Kurt Coleman more work (52 snaps!) in nickel and dime packages. This also played a role in nickel corner Chris Owens playing 54 snaps. Cooper earned his first extended action in two months thanks did the blowout. So did Sorensen, a backup rookie safety.

Read Next

The Chiefs have had a busy offseason, and The Star's Terez A. Paylor is here to break it down. Live from the NFL's Annual Meeting in Orlando, Terez interviewed the beat writers who covered the Chiefs' six most noteworthy offseason additions: Sammy Watkins, Anthony Hitchens, Kendall Fuller, Damien Williams, Chad Henne and David Amerson.